A Nigerian, Daniel
Adekunle Ojo, has been arrested by
the FBI in Durham, North Carolina, United States of America, and charged with
fraud and identity theft offences.
Ojo, who had been in
the US for 14 months, was
arrested after he was linked to a phishing scheme that
used an AOL and Gmail email accounts to target school districts in Connecticut
and Minnesota in an effort to get employees’ personal information and file bogus
tax returns.
Ojo appeared before a
US magistrate judge in Greensboro, N.C., and was ordered detained pending his
transfer to the District of Connecticut.
He was
arrested in his Durham home. Authorities said Ojo entered the US in May 2016 on
a visitor’s visa and failed to leave on his scheduled departure date in June
2016.
His arrest was
announced Friday by Deirdre M. Daly, United States Attorney for the District of
Connecticut, Patricia M. Ferrick, Special Agent in Charge of the New Haven
Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Joel P. Garland, Special
Agent in Charge of Internal Revenue Service
Criminal Investigation in New England.
Prosecutors said a
school district employee in Glastonbury, Connecticut, received an email in
February that appeared to be sent by another employee, who asked for tax
information for 1,600 school district workers.
The worker who
received the email then forwarded the information, which was used in the scheme
to file 122 bogus tax returns seeking nearly $600,000 in refunds, authorities
said.
Officials said the Internal Revenue
Service processed about six of the fake returns and electronically deposited
nearly $37,000 in refunds to various bank accounts.
Investigators linked the email sent to
the employee to Ojo, prosecutors said.
Officials also believe Ojo was involved
in similar email schemes targeting school districts in Groton, Connecticut, and
Bloomington, Minnesota.
In March, a Groton
school employee emailed tax information of 1,300 employees in response to an
email that appeared to be from the superintendent of schools. Authorities said
the information was used to file about 66 fraudulent tax returns seeking about
$364,000 in refunds.
Officials said the fake
returns weren’t processed because they had been flagged as being part of an
identity theft scheme after school employees discovered the problem.
Prosecutors also said they linked the
email account used by Ojo to a similar scam that obtained tax information for
about 2,800 school employees in Bloomington earlier this year.
Eric Placke, a
federal public defender in North Carolina who represented Ojo only for his
initial court appearance, declined to comment on Friday. It’s not clear who
Ojo’s attorney will be in Connecticut.
Daly urged the public
to double-check links and email addresses before clicking on and responding to
them, to avoid becoming an identity theft victim.
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